>pic kinda related
Hello guys, good morning :)
I have a problem and I need the wisdom of /g/..
I want to put like a trailer into my bike and sell shit around...BUT...I need wi-fi to do social wi-fi, but theres a problem..I need to power the equipments
What do you recommend ? Car battery with converter? UPS?
Tell me what you think about it
ROLLL
You might be better off asking /n/
>>60821188
Thanks for the tip, already posted there too
What's your favorite Netbook and why?
Mine is a Dell Latitude E4200.
>ssd
>Core 2 Duo
>non-glare display
>EC
>SC
>built-in mobile modem
>>60821012
x1c
>light
>ssd
>DDR3L
>anti-glare
Install. Gentoo
>>60821173
>x1c
Can't understand, why they left the Eth-Port out...
They are all over ebay and craigslist for 350-450$ just because they are sold out. I get they are used for mining but why do people pay 400$ for a card slower than 1070 that's 40-70$ cheaper
>>60820975
late crypto miners thinking they can still get on the crypto train but they still don't know GPU mining is dead.
Install gentoo
>>60820975
Brand loyalty, I suppose.
I wouldn't buy NVidia, but I also wouldn't pay that much for a RX480
>you can hold 11 microsd cards in this wallet card
11 * 128 gb = approximately 1 terrabyte.
So for every card slot in your wallet you're looking at 1 terrabyte of storage.
point being?
Installgentoo
>>60820957
d-did I do good /g/? what distro do I install on this baby?
>>60820870
Bad IDEA.
THINK about it.
Not a thinkpad 0/10
>true
Thailand?
Install Gentoo.
Old thread: >>60816224
What are you working on, /g/?
I want to branch out from webdev and go for something bigger.
Should I learn Python on top of my PHP/MySQL/JavaScript leet pro mega skills?
Should I get into deep learning?
Should I hire myself out to companies, or try to develop software and promote and sell it later?
>>60820727
I want jacks to make computer ZOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM VERY FAST
THX
>>60820749
Just do it.
>they chose gnome
>they chose gnome and not xubuntu
>y
>>60820606
>Not choosing Windows 10
kys
>>60820606
>>60820613
>he cares what they chose
>>60820606
>they didn't choose lxde
fn args<I, S>(&mut self, args: I) -> &mut Command where I: IntoIterator<Item = S>, S: AsRef<OsStr>
Quizz: On first glance without googling, how would you call this method?
>>60820592
I guess the first argument is a reference to the object the function is in, and the second some kind of array of strings
>>60820614
you already knew Rust, didnt you
Rust just like c++ fails in the most important areas of programming life: usability, iteration speed, simplicity. Oh ok great, we have another way to specify trait return types. Uh meanwhile thousands of Rust devs are wasting hundreds of thousands of hours waiting on Rust to compile. It's a human tragedy
>>60820413
>>60820413
>using windows 7
>go afk 5 minutes
>come back to active window randomly losing focus, like someone clicked on my desktop
Is this a ghost?
https://newsroom.intel.com/editorials/x86-approaching-40-still-going-strong/
>However, there have been reports that some companies may try to emulate Intel’s proprietary x86 ISA without Intel’s authorization. Emulation is not a new technology, and Transmeta was notably the last company to claim to have produced a compatible x86 processor using emulation (“code morphing”) techniques. Intel enforced patents relating to SIMD instruction set enhancements against Transmeta’s x86 implementation even though it used emulation. In any event, Transmeta was not commercially successful, and it exited the microprocessor business 10 years ago.
>Only time will tell if new attempts to emulate Intel’s x86 ISA will meet a different fate. Intel welcomes lawful competition, and we are confident that Intel’s microprocessors, which have been specifically optimized to implement Intel’s x86 ISA for almost four decades, will deliver amazing experiences, consistency across applications, and a full breadth of consumer offerings, full manageability and IT integration for the enterprise. However, we do not welcome unlawful infringement of our patents, and we fully expect other companies to continue to respect Intel’s intellectual property rights. Strong intellectual property protections make it possible for Intel to continue to invest the enormous resources required to advance Intel’s dynamic x86 ISA, and Intel will maintain its vigilance to protect its innovations and investments.
THANK YOU BASED INTEL
MICROSOFT & QUALSHIT IS FINISHED & BANKRUPT
>>60820009
>Intel welcomes lawful competition
>>60820009
>Intel welcomes lawful competition
AHAHAHAHAAAHAHAAHAAAHAHAHHAH
Intel is dead.
>>60820009
Intel should be slaughtered. Every single person working here, their parents, their relatives, their children.
Daily reminder that 99% of posters here look like this.
Asian men?
>>60820003
Most of them are Chads by Asian standards.
>>60820003
Jokes on you! I do have eyes!
Pic related looks 90% like me,I'm just higher ans shaved.
Welcome challenger, compare the color and read the hidden text in this picture or buy new,better monitor. 6-bit color,6-bit color,6-bit color are not hidden text.
>10-bit master race!
this test is only for IPS-monitor, faggot
Install gahnoo gentoo
>>60821074
i dont see any text
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/16/07/25/1133257/once-valued-at-125b-yahoos-web-assets-to-be-sold-to-verizon-for-483b-companies-confirm
>>60819820
or maybe the most expensive blowjob in history
Install gentoo...
>>60819820
That is old news and after the hack reveal there was a renegotiation and they dropped the price even more.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-02-21/verizon-said-to-reach-deal-for-lowered-yahoo-price-after-hacks
If you take the blue pill you wake up. C++ is the best programming language still. Functional programming isn't a thing and you go back to passing around your objects.
But if you take the red pill you see what is on the other side.
You can write functional code in any programming language.
Many "functional" concepts like first-class functions, closures, map/filter/reduce are not "functional" at all, they exist in many imperative languages.
"Functional programming" as described by this board seems to revolve entirely around avoiding mutability and state, 2 things that are literally unavoidable when running software on a CPU, since your CPU is literally one giant state machine.
And people will go to great lengths to avoid state just to bring it back with self-contained state machines known as "monads" that have absolutely nothing to do with the fringe category theory concept of the same name.
Why did they go to all this trouble?
Because you literally can't have I/O without state, and a programming language with no state will heat up the CPU but produce no useful work.
Functional programming is a meme.
>>60819890
It can be done.
>>60819890
functional concepts were copied from functional languages. Even exceptions were copied from FP.
Please stop AI research.
https://youtu.be/WSKi8HfcxEk
This guy is so fucking bluepilled it's hard to take him seriously when he blatantly ignores inconvenient things in his sanitized pop sci garbage videos.
>>60819530
Explain
>>60819505
From the perspective of the driving forces behind AI and automation, the incentives to pursue it a far too great. Large corporations, and Nations would be ill advised not to. Besides, it has the chance to be liberating, not just crippling